Hiroler225
New member
Im watching some youtube videos and I noticed that the player is placing hatches behind doors. Is this strategically sound? Just looking for some thoughts.
I guess I'm not making myself.. the hatch doesnt go anywhere.. that hatch is placed in the square behind the doorway and the opened to create a "half door". I am still trying to understand the strategic value.. I assume that since it is considered opened.. the will not try to destroy the door..Since zombies can occasionally glitch through them, use the double sided poles and melee through those, that way they don't randomly glitch through the hole in the top, since plates are planning a rework for zombie pathing I changed up the hatch placement.
Some call it too cheesy but that's what you do in an apocalypse, you barricade yourself and give yourself the upper hand.
If you open the hatch, they rarely get through. It makes it so you can melee them without too much worry of them hitting you or getting near you. It's not meant to prevent damage to the door, it's meant to prevent damage to you, and allow you to damage them. Glock 9s one shot one kill series will easily show you the valueI guess I'm not making myself.. the hatch doesnt go anywhere.. that hatch is placed in the square behind the doorway and the opened to create a "half door". I am still trying to understand the strategic value.. I assume that since it is considered opened.. the will not try to destroy the door..
That's interesting, it's a really great tactic in pois your going through, throw a hatch in the doorway, explore, run Back behind it and open it if your in danger then dispatch em easily@Darklegend222 thank you.. thats where I got the idea from.. was looking for a more thorough explanation. i wasnt seeing the use in the the one or two episodes i watched..
I wasn't expecting to prevent damage to the door.. but the zombies wont swing at the hatch either